HERE is the second part of my top ten Bradford City matches from the last decade.

There have certainly been some memorable ones, given the Bantams' cup exploits under Phil Parkinson, who also led the club to promotion in 2013.

We have already started our countdown from ten to six and these can be viewed here: Bradford City matches of the decade part one

Now, here is my personal top five from the 2010s including some video footage which is sure to bring the memories flooding back.

5) CITY 3 ASTON VILLA 1, January 2013

It couldn’t happen again, surely? Even after Arsenal, nobody seriously expected City to dump Premier League Aston Villa in the Capital One Cup semi-finals.

But a month on, Valley Parade witnessed another famous cup night as Phil Parkinson’s side turned the tables against a team 60 places above them.

Nahki Wells opened the scoring as Matt Duke pulled off a string of superb saves to keep Villa out – and earn my first 10/10 rating in the process.

Rory McArdle’s header from a Gary Jones cross made it 2-0 before Andreas Weimann broke Duke’s resistance with a scrambled response to give Villa a foothold in the tie.

But with two minutes left, Carl McHugh met Jones’ corner with a decisive contact to fly past fellow Irishman Shay Given – and give City one foot at Wembley.

Note: You might not understand the commentator on our selected YouTube clip but he certainly enjoys City's goals!

4) CITY 2 LEEDS 1, August 2014

A Valley Parade victory over Leeds was something that too many City fans had grown up thinking would never happen.

It had been 82 years since the last one – the only home win in that time had been at Odsal in 1986 – but Parkinson’s men finally set the record straight in this League Cup encounter.

Leeds went down to 10 men when Luke Murphy was sent off but struck against the run of play through Matt Smith.

They were ahead for just two minutes as the hosts hit back spectacularly. Leeds failed to clear Alan Sheehan’s corner and Billy Knott fired a thunderbolt from 30 yards.

Just over a minute later, the Kop were in ecstasy as City grabbed the winner with James Hanson jabbing home from close range after Gary Liddle’s cross.

3) CITY 1 ARSENAL 1, December 2012

“Keep calm and take it to penalties” was the slogan on the t-shirts but Parkinson was adamant that this was not down to a spot-kick lottery.

The thud of Thomas Vermaelen’s penalty against Matt Duke’s left post signalled a euphoric pitch invasion as City shocked Arsene Wenger’s big-hitters – and they were worthy winners.

Arsenal had named a powerful line-up for the Capital One Cup quarter-final visit and were expected to make short work of a team three divisions below.

But City rose to the occasion magnificently after Garry Thompson volleyed them into an early lead.

Gervinho’s miss of the season kept them in front until Vermaelen equalised with just two minutes left.

The shattered Bantams dug deep to survive Arsenal’s extra-time pressure as Santi Cazorla hit the bar before it came down to penalties at the Bradford End. Vermaelen’s miss was the sweetest sound you will hear.

2) CITY 3 NORTHAMPTON 0, May 2013

A whole season’s hard work was effectively wrapped up in 28 minutes at Wembley.

With Northampton star struck by their surroundings, the Bantams treated their return to the stadium where they had played in the Capital One Cup three months before as just another day at the office.

There were no sign of any nerves as James Hanson nodded the opener in the League Two play-off final from Garry Thompson’s cross.

Five minutes later and it was 2-0 from another header, Rory McArdle converting Nathan Doyle’s centre.

And City could get the promotion cigars out when Nahki Wells claimed his 26th goal of the season.

1) CHELSEA 2 CITY 4, January 2015

Premier League leaders Chelsea had won all 10 of their games at Stamford Bridge in pursuit of the quadruple.

They were 2-0 up after 38 minutes.

And then the magic of the FA Cup transformed a seemingly humdrum fourth-round tie into a footballing fairytale we were so privileged to witness.

Gary Cahill headed Chelsea in front for a corner and it looked business as usual when Ramires was set up by Mo Salah for their second.

But the 6,000 travelling fans were roaring when Jon Stead smashed a brilliant response four minutes before half-time. Surely, they couldn’t, could they?

Chelsea old boy Filipe Morais put us in dreamland when he equalised from James Meredith’s long throw.

Jose Mourinho threw on Cesc Fabregas and Eden Hazard in response – but it was City who went ahead through Andy Halliday.

Kurt Zouma blazed over when he should have levelled before sub Mark Yeates turned cleverly on Stead’s pass to put the seal on a result that will live on in the memories forever.

* Do you agree with Simon? Vote for your Bantams game of the decade here